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In 2025, the Australian Financial Complaints Authority (AFCA) received 111,373 complaints — the highest number in its history, up 14% on the prior year. The single largest complaint category was delay in claim handling: 9,274 complaints. AFCA secured $643 million in compensation for consumers — a 120% increase year on year.
These figures reflect a pattern that has been building since the 2022 Australian floods, which generated over 300,000 insurance claims and stretched insurer assessment capacity to breaking point. The Insurance Council of Australia (ICA) and the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) have both expressed concern about the pace at which major catastrophe claims are being resolved.
If your property damage claim is not progressing, you are not alone — and you have rights under Australian law and the General Insurance Code of Practice that most policyholders are unaware of.
The General Insurance Code of Practice (the Code) sets mandatory timeframes that all subscribing insurers must meet. It is enforced by the Insurance Council of Australia and can be applied by AFCA in dispute determinations.
| What must happen | Timeframe under the Code |
|---|---|
| Acknowledge receipt of your claim | 10 business days |
| Request any additional information needed to assess the claim | As soon as reasonably practicable |
| Decide the claim or explain why a decision cannot yet be made | Within 4 months of receiving the claim |
| Provide a progress update if still assessing after 45 business days | Every 20 business days thereafter |
| Respond to an IDR (formal complaint) about the delay | 30 calendar days |
Source: General Insurance Code of Practice (2020, amended 2024). These timeframes apply to subscribing insurers. Confirm whether your insurer subscribes at codeofpractice.com.au.
If your insurer has missed any of these timeframes without giving you a written explanation and a revised date, the Code has been breached. This is the basis for your formal complaint.
Before contacting your insurer or escalating, create a clear written record of what has happened and what has not. This timeline is the foundation of any IDR complaint or AFCA submission.
Save copies of all written communications. Do not rely on verbal commitments alone — request everything in writing.
Internal Dispute Resolution (IDR) is the formal complaints process your insurer is required to operate under ASIC Regulatory Guide 271 and the General Insurance Code of Practice. It is not the same as ringing your claims manager — it is a separate complaints channel that triggers specific legal obligations.
To lodge an IDR complaint, write to your insurer and:
Send the complaint to your insurer's complaints team — not your claims handler. The complaints team email or postal address will be on your policy documents or the insurer's website under "Complaints" or "Dispute Resolution."
Your insurer must respond to your IDR complaint within 30 calendar days. If they do not, you can go directly to AFCA without waiting for the IDR response.
If your insurer's IDR response does not resolve the delay — or they do not respond within 30 days — you can lodge a complaint with the Australian Financial Complaints Authority (AFCA).
AFCA's 2025 data shows that delay complaints are increasingly being resolved in the complainant's favour — particularly where the insurer cannot demonstrate that its handling met the Code's timeframe requirements. The combination of your written timeline and a clear IDR record is your strongest evidence.
For more detail on the full AFCA complaint process, see the AFCA Complaint Guide.
Many policyholders believe they must wait for insurer authorisation before starting any work. This is not correct under Australian law.
Section 56 of the Insurance Contracts Act 1984 imposes a duty to mitigate on the insured. This means you are legally required to take reasonable steps to prevent further damage — and you are entitled to do so. Reasonable mitigation costs are claimable, even if incurred before the insurer authorises repairs.
In practice, this means:
Critical: document everything before, during, and after any mitigation work. Photographs, moisture readings, equipment logs, and contractor invoices are all required to claim these costs. A qualified IICRC-certified restoration contractor will provide this documentation as standard.
Full rebuilding and structural repairs are generally more complex — insurers typically require scope approval before permanent repairs. However, the mitigation steps above should not wait.
If the delay involves a dispute about scope — what damage the insurer is prepared to cover — an independent assessment from a qualified restoration contractor provides AFCA and your IDR with technically credible evidence.
An independent scope of works:
AFCA can and does prefer independent contractor evidence over insurer-engaged assessors where the independent evidence is thorough and credible.
The Disaster Recovery platform connects property owners with IICRC-certified restoration contractors across Australia. An independent assessment can typically be arranged within 24–48 hours of contact.
This guide provides general information only and does not constitute legal or financial advice. For complex disputes involving large amounts, consider consulting a lawyer or public loss assessor who specialises in property insurance claims.
The complete AFCA complaint process — IDR first, then AFCA: what information you need, timeframes, and what AFCA can order.
How insurer delays compound property damage costs and what Section 54 and Section 56 of the Insurance Contracts Act protect.
Your rights when an insurer refuses your claim — written reasons, IDR, AFCA escalation, and how to challenge common denial grounds.
Get connected with IICRC certified contractors in your area
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